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Tag Archives: party affiliation

HB 26: it’s my party and I’ll vote if I want to

04 Tuesday Dec 2018

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

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Dan Stacy, General Assembly, HB 26, missouri, party affiliation

Heh. Rick Santorum (r) [pdf].

It’s that time again. Bills are being prefiled for the coming session of the Missouri General Assembly.

HB 26
Changes the law regarding primary elections
Sponsor: Stacy, Dan (031)
Proposed Effective Date: 8/28/2019
LR Number: 0330H.02I
Last Action: 12/03/2018 – Prefiled (H)
Bill String: HB 26
Next House Hearing: Hearing not scheduled
Calendar: Bill currently not on a House calendar

The bill text:

FIRST REGULAR SESSION
HOUSE BILL NO. 26 [pdf]
100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVE STACY.
0330H.02I DANA RADEMAN MILLER, Chief Clerk

AN ACT

To amend chapter 115, RSMo, by adding thereto one new section relating to closed primary elections.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:

Section A. Chapter 115, RSMo, is amended by adding thereto one new section, to be known as section 115.628, to read as follows:
115.628. 1. This section shall be known and may be cited as the “Integrity in Political Party Voting Act”.
2. Except as provided in subsection of this section, the governing body of any established political party shall adopt a closed primary election system that shall be enforced by the office of the secretary of state and the requisite local election authority. The closed primary election system shall be binding upon all elections for partisan offices in this state.
3. The secretary of state shall maintain voter registration records in accordance with the Missouri voter registration system defined under section 115.158. No later than six months prior to a primary election date, the secretary of state shall distribute a list of eligible voters for each established political party to all requisite local election authorities. Local election authorities shall implement the closed primary system for any primary election after January 1, 2021, by providing primary ballots indicating political party nominees only to those individuals who are registered to vote in this state and who appear on the lists provided by the secretary of state.
4. Any registered voter affiliated with a political party shall remain affiliated with that political party for one year after any primary election before he or she may change party affiliation.
5. Any political party entitled to ballot access as established under section 115.315 shall be allowed to exempt itself from a closed primary and conduct a caucus or primary election at its own expense. The party shall be allowed to submit a general election candidate for the general election ballot.
6. The state shall pay the costs of implementing the closed primary system under this section, with the exception of any caucus or primary election conducted under subsection 4.
7. Local election authorities shall notify registered voters of the political party affiliation requirements of this section prior to the August 2020 primary election by using all current election mailings that would otherwise be mailed to registered voters.
8. Beginning January 1, 2020, the voter registration application form shall be amended to include a choice of political party affiliation.
9. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, this section shall provide that initial political party registration be determined by the political party ballot chosen by the voter in the 2020 presidential preference primary and the August 2020 primary. Appropriate software shall be provided at voter check-in for political party ballot selection so as to minimize later data entry for election authorities. Those who have not declared a party affiliation before the 2020 general election shall have the option to do so using the appropriate software during voter check-in for such election. The election authority shall have six months to process this initial political party registration through its normal means of administration.
10. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, all current processes for registering voters in the various counties shall remain in place.

Closed primaries, with an opt out for parties at their expense.

“…No later than six months prior to a primary election date, the secretary of state shall distribute a list of eligible voters for each established political party to all requisite local election authorities. Local election authorities shall implement the closed primary system for any primary election after January 1, 2021, by providing primary ballots indicating political party nominees only to those individuals who are registered to vote in this state and who appear on the lists provided by the secretary of state…”

Wait, so if you registered to vote thirty days before the primary you won’t be on “the list” so then you can’t vote in the primary?

Heh. Rick Santorum.

HB 1052: it's my party and I'll cry if I want to

09 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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General Assembly, HB 1052, missouri, party affiliation

Another interesting prefiled bill for the 2012 session of the Missouri General Assembly, from Representative Sue Allen (r). Voter registration and closed primary voting by party:

SECOND REGULAR SESSION

HOUSE BILL NO. 1052

96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVES ALLEN (Sponsor) AND FLANIGAN (Co-sponsor).

4451L.01I                                                                                                     D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk

AN ACT

To repeal sections 115.135, 115.137, 115.155, 115.157, 115.163, 115.225, 115.249, and 115.637, RSMo, and to enact in lieu thereof nine new sections relating to primary elections, with penalty provisions.

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the state of Missouri, as follows:

[….]

4. Any person updating or changing such person’s party affiliation as required under section 115.166 may update or change such party affiliation for the upcoming election at any time before the deadline for registration for such election established in this section. Any update or change to such person’s party affiliation made after the deadline for registration established in this section shall be effective only for subsequent elections.

[….]

3. For all primary elections held after January 1, 2013, any person who is entitled to vote in such primary under this chapter shall be entitled to vote only the official primary election ballot of the political party designated in the person’s voter registration. Any person attempting to vote or voting a primary election ballot of a political party other than that for which the person’s designated party affiliation qualifies the person to vote shall be guilty of a class four election offense as provided in section 115.637.

[….]

3. Any person who fails to designate a party affiliation shall be registered without a party affiliation. The election authority shall notify the person by mail that the person has been registered without a party affiliation and that the person may change or update the person’s party affiliation as provided in section 115.166.

[….]

115.166. Any person desiring to change or update such person’s party affiliation shall notify the person’s election authority with a signed written notice in the same manner as a change of address is filed under section 115.165.

115.225. 1. Before use by election authorities in this state, the secretary of state shall approve the marking devices and the automatic tabulating equipment used in electronic voting systems and may promulgate rules and regulations to implement the intent of sections 115.225 to 115.235….(5) Permits each voter in a primary election to vote for the candidates of [only one] the political party [announced by the voter in advance] designated by such voter in the person’s voter registration as provided under this chapter…

[….]

(20) Voting or attempting to vote a primary election ballot of a political party other than that for which the person’s designated party affiliation qualifies the person to vote.

[emphasis in original]

That last one makes no sense whatsoever. It must be a typo.

If this passes it’ll eliminate one of the most fun enterprises in Missouri politics – crossing over to a contested republican primary to vote for the most outrageous wingnut.

And, it would end the rude practice of responding, when someone is pontificating on politics with the preface, “I’ve been a registered [name of political party] for [random number of decades],”  with “No, you aren’t, there is no voter registration by political party in Missouri.” They really hate that. And it’s really fun, too. Especially when it’s in front of a large group of people.

Party identification in Missouri – Gallup

30 Friday Jan 2009

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2008, Gallup, missouri, party affiliation

The Gallup polling organization released their numbers showing party affiliation by state.

Missouri

% Democrat/Lean Democrat – 48.8

% Republican/Lean Republican – 37.9

Dem-Rep gap (pct. pts.) – 11

Number of interviews – 7,904

The numbers for Colorado, Nevada, and North Carolina are very similar to those for Missouri. It’s interesting to note that Obama carried three of those four states (we’re the exception). Gallup’s methodology:

State of the States: Political Party Affiliation

…In 2008, Gallup interviewed more than 350,000 U.S. adults as part of Gallup Poll Daily tracking…

…This large data set provides the unique ability to give reliable estimates of state-level characteristics for 2008. Each sample of state residents was weighted by demographic characteristics to ensure it is representative of the state’s population.

In order to rank the states on partisanship, Gallup analyzes “leaned” party identification by state. This measure adds partisan-leaning independents to the percentage who identify with either of the parties. Thus, the Republican total includes Republican identifiers and independents who lean Republican, and the Democratic total likewise includes Democratic identifiers and independents who lean Democratic…

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